The focus of many
(not all) journalists on GDP growth was in evidence again in the
reporting of the Bank of England’s latest UK forecast.
Bank of England
Inflation Report February 2017 and (in italics) my estimates
Growth rates of
|
2016
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019
|
Ave 98-07
|
GDP
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
1.6
|
1.7
|
2.9
|
Household Income
|
2
|
0.75
|
0.25
|
0.75
|
3.0
|
Savings ratio [1]
|
5.75
|
4.5
|
3.75
|
3.25
|
8.0
|
GDP per head
|
1.25
|
1.25
|
1.0
|
1.0
|
2.25 [2]
|
Household Income p.h.
|
1.25
|
0
|
-0.5
|
0
|
na
|
[1] Level [2]
Average 1955-2007
The headline news
was Brexit didn’t seem to be having much effect on GDP growth,
despite earlier pessimism from the Bank. Leavers have never forgiven
the Bank for giving their pessimistic views on the immediate impact
of Brexit during the campaign. There is also an attempt to suggest
that because many macro forecasters have been surprised by the
resilience of the economy since the vote that must mean that the near
universal view of economists that Brexit will be bad in the medium
term is also now very suspect. Anyone who knows about these things
knows that an unconditional macro forecast is very different from a
conditional forecast based largely on international trade evidence,
but as most people do not know these things (including most political
journalists) it is an effective bit of propaganda.
A major reason for
the more optimistic forecast now is that consumers so far have
decided to reduce their saving, which the Bank had not expected. One
possible reason for this is that a lot of consumers have decided to
undertake major purchases like buying a car to beat the coming price
rises expected as a result of the depreciation. That alone would
imply that the decline in the ratio is temporary, but as we shall
see, the Bank is now expecting it to continue.
It is hard to forget
a remark made to a fellow economist during the referendum campaign by
the member of the audience in a public meeting in the North West.
After this economist had talked about the beneficial effects of
joining the Euro on GDP growth, they said something like ‘it may
have helped your GDP but it hasn’t helped mine’. In that spirit I
want to make two points that were generally ignored by the media in
their reporting of this forecast.
First (as regular
readers will know), GDP is the output of the country, not the output
of an average member of that country. Although the ONS now releases
estimates of GDP per head (or per capita as it is often known) with
its GDP estimates, most journalists seem to have not noticed. One
reason for the focus on aggregate GDP is that forecasters like the
Bank continue to publish only aggregate figures.
The table above is
an attempt to adjust the Bank of England’s forecast for expected
growth in the population. I’ve basically just taken the average
population growth rate for the last few years and projected it
forward. That could be on the high side if immigration from the EU
falls off substantially over the next few years, but this would
probably only increase the numbers by another 0.25%. Growth of 1% in
GDP per head does not sound so good, particularly when you note it is
less than half the historic average.
Second, over the
following few years even GDP per head is likely to not feel like ‘my
GDP’. We can see this from the Bank’s forecast for real household
income. These fail to get above 1% growth. The reason is something
Leavers do not like to talk about, and which therefore many
journalists ignore: the impact of the Brexit depreciation in
sterling. As this depreciation gradually leads to inflation not
matched by higher nominal wages, real income growth will suffer.
Why is forecast GDP
growth so much higher than income growth? The Bank now expects
consumers to reduce their savings to unprecedentedly low levels. Why
would they do that? The Bank operates a model where consumers base their current consumption on anticipated future income, and where
expectations are rational. If, as economists universally expect,
Brexit leads to slower income growth in the future, consumers should
have reacted to that by cutting current consumption because their
future income will grow more slowly relative to pre-Brexit vote
expectations. This they clearly have not done, in part because many
of them do not believe future income growth will be reduced by
Brexit. That is at the heart of the recent forecast revisions. But
this leaves the Bank without any guide to how the savings ratio will
evolve. If consumers continue to believe everything is OK, despite
the short term fall in their income growth, then further falls in the
savings ratio are possible.
Of course even these
numbers for household income are also inflated by likely household
growth. (They measure all income going to households, not the income
of an average household.) The final row adjusts for the expected
growth in households. The average household size has remained
constant over the last decade, and I have assumed that continues. As
you can see, the income of the average household is at best going to
be flat, and may fall slightly. So to say, as some Leavers have, that
this forecast suggests Brexit will have no effect before we leave is
completely wrong.
So how is the score
in the match going between Leavers and economists, where goals are
actual events rather than clever soundbites. The last time we looked
the Leavers had let in two goals: the depreciation in sterling
immediately after the vote, and then the Bank having to bring rates
down to their lower bound again and start another round of QE.
Nothing since then suggests those goals were invalid. If I’m
feeling generous I’d say having to revise up a forecast could count
as a shot on goal, but as it reflects a mixture of policy and
consumers saving less I think it is also a miss.
But there has been a
new goal scored by the Leavers, but unfortunately in their own goal.
It is now clear to those not dependent on Brexit propaganda that as a
result of Brexit we are going to be a supplicant to probably the most
dangerous and right wing US president ever. Truly awful. Should never
have been president. Got 5 million less votes, and that’s not
counting those stopped from voting. Complete fluke. Only got the
votes he did because of a biased media and fake news. FBI is an
absolute disgrace. Everyone agrees. He’s got to go. Some people are
saying he is unstable. Others that he is a stooge of the far right.
Impeach the guy. Truly awful. (Sorry, couldn’t resist)
Which all means, the
score is now
Economists 3 Leavers 0
and we haven’t
even reached half-time yet. But there may be a lot more goals to come
when the negotiations conclude. If the economists keep scoring, we
can avoid extra time, which is desirable because that only ends in
2030!
I'd be interested in hearing more about the "international trade evidence" used in Brexit forecasts.
ReplyDeleteThen please read the many estimates of the long term impact of Brexit. You could start with http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/cp477.pdf
DeleteA great read as ever Simon. I stumbled across this in the Guardian this morning and wondered if this can be squared with the arguments you make here and elsewhere, or whether it is a bit of a 'feel good' report designed to keep the spirits up in the face of some troubling times ahead (to put it mildly): https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/feb/07/uk-g7-economy-trade-pwc-brexit-us
ReplyDeleteI agree with your analysis here; the aggregate figures do not give a true picture of the situation.
ReplyDeleteI believe that the position is likely to be worse than this because there is no recession built into the forecast and how likely is this in the next two years? We are, arguably overdue one now.
And, although the savings ratio is shown as declining, does this mean that debt will not increase and that a decline in the SR and an increase in debt are mutually exclusive? I say this because I wonder what the effect of the debt burden will be in holding back consumption and whether this is reflected in the forecasts; putting it another way will the debt burden reduce growth even more?
As far as DT is concerned you may be right but, to me, he has one big advantage. I believe that the current economic system we have is unreformable and vested interests, especially in the US, will never do this. DT is far more likely to blow the whole thing up and this is the only way it will be reformed. His suspension of Dodd- Frank is one indication that he's prepared to unleash the bankers yet again and they in their greed and venality will crash the system - again - and that, in my view, is a necessary condition for true reform.
I have never understood that by taking many steps backwards, we will subsequently be able to make even more steps forward.
DeleteIndeed but I was suggesting that these might be unintended collateral effects of Trump's policies, not deliberate actions on his part to that end.
DeleteAs this depreciation gradually leads to inflation not matched by higher nominal wages, real income growth will suffer.
ReplyDeleteThis is where Simon's anlysis breaks down or some might say falls apart.
Simon seems to think that U.K. importers can keep raising their prices as our wages fall even though we all only have a set amount of income every month to spend on imports.
Simon thinks we are all going to rush out and borrow money from the bank so we can all buy these imports. What he fails to see is that we won't.
We will buy cheaper alternatives instead which only highlights the growth in cheaper supermarkets over the past few years.
Then these importers will be struggling to keep their market share that they fought so hard for over the last 50 years. So they will have to reduce their prices and the floating rate will adjust to its true level.
As any central bank report shows quite clearly. Pass through inflation from a drop in a floating exchange rate is minimal. Infact, If Simon could point me to any economic paper that shows a fall in a floating exchange rate leads to pass through inflation then I wish he would. He could post it on here.
Unfortunately, it is a theory all based on using fixed exchange rates.
Try substituting away from oil.
DeleteIt would be fascinating to see your analysis split by income deciles.
ReplyDeleteDo you mean nearly 3 million votes Trump lost by, not 5 million?
ReplyDeletepopular vote (CNN politics)
trump 46.1% 62,979,879
clinton 48.2% 65,844,954
As I thought was clear, I was at that point writing in the manner of Trump, who you may have noticed has a slight tendency to exaggerate when it suits him.
Delete"consumers should have reacted to that by cutting current consumption"
ReplyDeleteReally? Doesn't your model suggest that monetary easing leads to higher spending? Carney eased monetary policy, AD rose.
True, but in most models that would be dominated by a fall in expected income. But you are right - its complicated.
DeleteGood to see you admitting that 'expectations' is BS in a roundabout way.
ReplyDelete"Got 5 million less votes"
Nobody knows who would have won had the system not been based on the EC. The dynamics were different. If there is a constituency system - as there is in a presidential poll then the 'popular vote' is meaningless. If you're a trump voter in a democrat state then it's like being a Tory in Barnsley. You're wasting your time.
See response to comment above from Anon.
DeleteI take it the Trump par is intended in part as a humorous representation of your exasperation? Got 5 million less votes? I thought it was 3 million. Biased media? I wasn't in US at the time (or any other time for that), but got the impression that the mainstream media was overwhelmingly in agreement that Trump was a dangerous, narcissistic, unhinged clown.
ReplyDeleteI was taking Trumps tendency to exaggerate e.g. biggest ever EC win. Media includes Fox News etc.
DeleteThe BoE having to revise its forecasts because misinformation and poor reporting mean consumers don't know that the rational response to the coming storm is to increase their savings ratio, is rather a pyrrhic victory for Leavers. (Yes, I know you didn't count it as a goal, but they did.) Funny the media didn't report it that way, either...
ReplyDelete